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The Ministry of Urban Development and Construction (Amharic: የከተማ ልማትና ኮንስትራክሽን ሚኒስቴር) is an Ethiopian government department responsible for urban development and construction works. It was established in October 2005 by Proclamation No. 471/2005.
Transport in Ethiopia is overseen by the Ministry of Transport and Communications. Over the last years, the Ethiopian federal authorities have significantly increased funding for rail and road construction to build an infrastructure, that allows better economic development. A taxi in Addis Ababa, 2008
Energy and infrastructure sectors cover the larger construction activities in Ethiopia, responsible for providing cost-effective homes for benefit of low-income households, and increased the country's GDP to 9.5%. This segment employs 1.8 million workers, which makes the second largest sector in Ethiopia. [1] Unfinished building in 2012
The city covered 29% of Ethiopia's GDP (59.5 Billions $ in 2024) and 20% of national urban development as of 2022. Commercial Bank of Ethiopia in Addis Ababa. Meanwhile, youth unemployment, lack of sufficient infrastructure in transport and poor housing, and sanitation management have appeared as core problems.
Addis Ababa Mayor Adanech Abebe announced that the second phase of corridor development project works is set to be launched in October 2024 in various areas of the Ethiopian capital, after the success of the first phase of the corridor and redevelopment project. [13] It spans 132 kilometers from Kazanchis to Estinfanos Corridor. [14]
To accomplish this task, Ethiopia needed infrastructure to develop resources, a material base to improve living conditions, and better health, education, communications, and other services. [41] A key element of the emperor's new economic policy was the adoption of centrally administered development plans .
Transport infrastructure in Ethiopia (3 C) This page was last edited on 10 February 2017, at 23:51 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution ...
In 2018, access of electricity in Ethiopia reached 45%, and power generation, especially hydropower, tripled in a decade from about 850 MW to above 2,000 MW. [ 12 ] [ 13 ] According to the World Bank , [ 14 ] power outage of Ethiopia occurred 8.2 times in a typical month, each average duration of 5.8 hours.